Web AppSec ninja, semicolon character enthusiast!

Monthly Archives: August 2014

After a few years of finding IIS Short File Name Disclosure vulnerability/feature, I discovered a new method that can work on the latest versions of IIS!

It is a simple trick: If OPTIONS method is used instead of a GET method, the latest versions of IIS will produce a different error message when a short file name is available on the server. The actual bug is exactly the same as the original report and therefore this does not count as a new issue but a new technique.

I have successfully tested this scanner on a freshly installed IIS7.5 on Windows 2008 R2 and also on an IIS8.0 on Windows 2012. It seems 8.3 names are still enabled by default… and Microsoft does not seem to be keen to patch this low risk issue after a few years. Well, it is a feature now just like the semi-colon vulnerability in IIS6! ;-)

Test your IIS server and see if it is vulnerable! You may need to add valid headers and cookies to the scanner to be able to scan some special servers.